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Hazbin Hotel Album Cover

"Hazbin Hotel" Soundtrack Lyrics

Cartoon • 2024

Track Listing



"Hazbin Hotel (Original Soundtrack)" Soundtrack Description

Hazbin Hotel Season 1 official trailer frame with Charlie in Pentagram City
Hazbin Hotel — official Season 1 trailer imagery, 2024

Overview

What happens when a raunchy underworld comedy plays the season like a Broadway cast album? Season 1 of Hazbin Hotel builds its narrative on purpose-written numbers by Sam Haft and Andrew Underberg, then releases them as a compact A24 Music album. Songs aren’t garnish; they’re the scene work—character turns, reveals, and punchlines arrive mid-melody.

The rollout mirrored TV beats: three EPs across January–February 2024, followed by the complete album with 16 tracks. The approach paid off commercially—Billboard records the soundtrack hitting #1 on Top Soundtracks and cracking the Billboard 200—while the show’s own trailer pitched the musical premise up front. Official Charts Company entries, Billboard features, and the album pages confirm the dates, label, and chart run.

Trailer frame of the Heaven Embassy, a setting tied to multiple musical numbers
Locations as song stages — the Heaven Embassy and the Hotel lobby, 2024

Questions & Answers

Who wrote the season’s songs?
Sam Haft and Andrew Underberg composed and produced the Season 1 numbers for A24 Music.
Is there an official album?
Yes: Hazbin Hotel (Original Soundtrack), issued Feb 2, 2024 after three staggered EPs.
What label released it?
A24 Music.
Did the album chart?
Yes. Billboard reports #1 on Top Soundtracks and a Top-20 peak on the Billboard 200.
Who did the show’s theme?
Theme music composer credit: Parry Gripp (separate from the season’s songs).
Where can I stream the album?
Major platforms carry it; Apple Music and Spotify list the 16-track set.

Notes & Trivia

  • The release cadence matched the drop windows: EPs for Eps. 1–6, then a final EP and full album the week the finale arrived.
  • The album is credited to the cast (various artists); lead vocals rotate by character and guest stars.
  • Prime Video promoted several sequences as standalone videos (“Happy Day in Hell,” “Poison,” “Hell’s Greatest Dad”).
  • Billboard and the Official Charts Company both tracked the soundtrack’s multi-week chart presence.

Genres & Themes

Show-tune DNA, pop production. Big hooks, clear leitmotifs, and duet/ensemble architecture, produced with contemporary drums, synth bass, and guitar sheen.

Character color-coding. Angel Dust’s cuts skew club-pop cabaret; Alastor and Vox spar over noir/retro textures; Heaven scenes carry bright choral or pageant sparkle that curdles when the plot turns.

Ensemble trailer montage hinting at duet/ensemble structure of the soundtrack
Styles mapped to meaning — duets, villain songs, and rally anthems, 2024

Tracks & Scenes

“Happy Day in Hell” — Cast
Where it plays: Ep. 1 “Overture,” Charlie’s mission statement as she heads through Pentagram City to the Heaven Embassy; musical number.
Why it matters: Establishes the show’s thesis—rehabilitation in a place built for sin—and introduces the ensemble voice.

“Hell Is Forever” — Adam (Alex Brightman)
Where it plays: Ep. 1 “Overture,” inside Heaven’s halls as Adam slams Charlie’s proposal; musical number set against pageant pomp.
Why it matters: Antagonist ethos in song; contrasts Heaven’s polish with ruthless doctrine.

“Stayed Gone” — Vox & Alastor
Where it plays: Ep. 2 “Radio Killed the Video Star,” after word spreads that Alastor’s back; staged confrontation duet.
Why it matters: Villain rivalry as theater—Vox’s media swagger vs. Alastor’s old-radio menace.

“It Starts With Sorry” — Charlie & Sir Pentious (feat. Angel, Vaggie)
Where it plays: Ep. 2, after Pentious is caught spying; in-hotel number that reframes justice as contrition.
Why it matters: Pushes the redemption arc from slogan to practice; the hotel’s ethos becomes action.

“Poison” — Angel Dust
Where it plays: Ep. 4 “Masquerade,” Angel confronts his abusive bond with Valentino; nightclub-set performance.
Why it matters: A showstopper about entrapment and survival; the season’s most discussed solo turns confessional.

“Loser, Baby” — Husk & Angel Dust
Where it plays: Ep. 4, post-“Poison” cooldown and pep talk; duet at the bar.
Why it matters: Found-family care in two voices; humor softens a heavy subject.

“Hell’s Greatest Dad” — Lucifer & Alastor (with ensemble)
Where it plays: Ep. 5 “Dad Beat Dad,” hotel floor showdown when Lucifer finally shows up; electro-swing duel.
Why it matters: A father–foe faceoff that collapses bravado into jokes and threats on the same downbeat.

“Welcome to Heaven” — Heavenly choir (Darren Criss, Shoba Narayan, Patina Miller)
Where it plays: Ep. 6, formal greeting on arrival; choral pastiche that sells the façade.
Why it matters: Sets up the rug-pull and the courtroom fireworks to come.

“You Didn’t Know” — Charlie, Emily, Sera, Adam, Lute
Where it plays: Ep. 6 trial sequence in Heaven’s court; ensemble argument song.
Why it matters: Exposes the Extermination; flips loyalties mid-verse.

“Out For Love” — Carmilla Carmine
Where it plays: Ep. 7 “Hello Rosie!,” training montage for Vaggie before Extermination Day; fight-prep anthem.
Why it matters: Reframes Vaggie’s motive from anger to protection; defines the coming battle in emotional terms.

“Ready For This” — Charlie, Rosie, Alastor & Cannibal Town
Where it plays: Ep. 7 recruitment sequence in Cannibal Town; march-to-war ensemble.
Why it matters: Pulls disparate factions into one chorus right before the climactic assault.

“More Than Anything (Reprise)” — Charlie & Vaggie
Where it plays: Ep. 8 eve-of-battle reconciliation; intimate duet.
Why it matters: Stakes the finale on love and trust rather than spectacle.

“Finale” — Ensemble
Where it plays: Ep. 8 closing; battle aftermath and a new status quo.
Why it matters: Confirms the redemption thesis with a plot payoff and a musical catharsis.

Trailer spotlight: Prime Video cut Season 1 marketing with clips from “Happy Day in Hell,” “Poison,” and “Hell’s Greatest Dad.”

Music–Story Links

Every major relationship gets a song form: villain vs. villain (showdown duet), mentor-to-ward (solo-into-duet), movement-building (processional ensemble). Heaven cues sparkle to sell legitimacy; when the mask slips, the harmony narrows and percussion hardens. Angel’s arc routes through a club-language ballad; Vaggie’s pivot from rage to protection happens inside a training anthem, so the motive change “sings” before the script names it.

Rally montage frame foreshadowing Episode 7’s recruitment anthems
Song forms as plot engines — confession, rally, and reckoning, 2024

How It Was Made

Vivienne “VivziePop” Medrano’s team built Season 1 as an original-song musical; Haft and Underberg wrote and produced the pieces with rotating Broadway and TV leads on vocals. The soundtrack arrived via A24 Music (three EPs, then the full album). Theme music composer credit goes to Parry Gripp, distinct from the episode songs. Cast lists and album credits on platform pages corroborate vocal features and producers.

Reception & Quotes

Coverage noted how the numbers carry story weight, not just vibe. The album outperformed typical TV companions, with multi-week chart stays.

“Disarmingly straightforward anthems about craving approval or redemption.” Variety
“I wanted the songs to feel truly part of the script and a major feature.” Rolling Stone

Availability: the complete Season 1 album streams widely; Prime Video hosts official song clips. Billboard documents its Top Soundtracks #1 run.

Additional Info

  • Pre-release singles: “Happy Day in Hell” (Oct 2023) and “Poison” (Jan 2024); an official remix of “Poison” dropped on April 1, 2024.
  • EP schedule: Part 1 (Jan 19), Part 2 (Jan 26), Part 3 (Feb 1); full album (Feb 2, 2024).
  • The album credits the “Cast of Hazbin Hotel” as artists; platform metadata lists featured performers by track.
  • Season 2 followed in 2025 with new songs and returning vocalists; Season 1 album remained a strong catalog title.
  • Trusted sources that covered the music’s impact: Billboard, Official Charts Company, Screen Rant, A24 Music.

Technical Info

  • Title: Hazbin Hotel (Original Soundtrack)
  • Year/Type: 2024 — TV musical soundtrack
  • Songwriters/Producers: Sam Haft; Andrew Underberg
  • Theme Music: Parry Gripp (series theme)
  • Label: A24 Music
  • Chart notes: US Top Soundtracks #1; Billboard 200 Top 20 peak
  • Trailer ID (YouTube): OLSWVCwy88g

Canonical Entities & Relations

SubjectRelationObject
Sam Haftcomposed & producedHazbin Hotel (Original Soundtrack)
Andrew Underbergcomposed & producedHazbin Hotel (Original Soundtrack)
A24 MusicreleasedHazbin Hotel (Original Soundtrack), 2024
Vivienne Medranocreated & directedHazbin Hotel (TV series)
Parry GrippcomposedSeries theme music
“Poison”performed byAngel Dust (Blake Roman) — Ep. 4 “Masquerade”
“Hell’s Greatest Dad”performed byLucifer & Alastor — Ep. 5 “Dad Beat Dad”
“You Didn’t Know”performed byCharlie, Emily, Sera, Adam, Lute — Ep. 6 “Welcome to Heaven”
Amazon Prime VideodistributedHazbin Hotel Season 1

Sources: Billboard; Official Charts Company; Apple Music; Spotify; Variety; Rolling Stone; Screen Rant; Wikipedia (series & soundtrack).

The soundtrack for "Hazbin Hotel," a 2024 adult animated musical comedy series, captures the unique mix of mature comedy, memorable characters, and engaging songs that has attracted a global audience since its initial YouTube premiere in 2019. Vivienne Medrano created this series, with production by A24, Amazon Studios, SpindleHorse Toons, and Bento Box Entertainment. Its first appearance on Amazon Prime Video brought its colorful hellish setting to the forefront with numerous episodes and musical tracks accompanying them. The minds behind the music, Sam Haft and Andrew Underberg, have carefully composed tracks that go beyond mere music to play a crucial role in the narrative. The soundtrack, featuring songs like "Happy Day In Hell," "Hell Is Forever," "Stayed Gone," and "Loser, Baby," spans various genres and styles to mirror the series' eclectic and wide-ranging storyline. The lead single, "Loser, Baby," a theatrical tune in the style of Broadway, highlights the singing prowess of Keith David and Blake Roman, marking itself as a memorable track for its catchy melody and expressive delivery. Released on February 2, 2024, the complete soundtrack offers 16 songs ranging from upbeat to sentimental tunes, providing a comprehensive auditory journey that enhances the show’s visual and story elements. With the voices of Erika Henningsen, Stephanie Beatriz, and others contributing, the album emerges as a collaborative masterpiece that epitomizes the Hazbin Hotel's creative universe. Marking a significant achievement, the Hazbin Hotel soundtrack illustrates Sam Haft and Andrew Underberg's musical talent. Haft, associated with The Living Tombstone, contributes his profound narrative musical sense, whereas Underberg, who is Emmy-nominated for his compositions, adds sophistication and complexity to the music. Their collective efforts birth a soundtrack that not only delights but deepens the Hazbin Hotel viewing experience. In summary, the 2024 series soundtrack of Hazbin Hotel is a lively and varied collection of songs that perfectly encapsulates the dark comedic yet touching story of the show. It reflects Vivienne Medrano's creative vision and the musical brilliance of Sam Haft and Andrew Underberg, offering an immersive experience into the Hazbin Hotel world for fans, even when they are not watching the show.

November, 10th 2025


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